Dublin Declaration on Secularism Empowering Women 2013

by Michael Nugent on September 21, 2013

On 30 June 2013, Atheist Ireland’s international conference in Dublin on Empowering Women Through Secularism discussed and adopted the following declaration. We are launching it today at the Atheist Ireland AGM in the Harbour Hotel in Galway.

1. Secular Values in Society

The secular values that will empower women are science-based reason, equality and empathy in alliance with the principles of feminism.

Priorities in democratic states: secular values will protect and advance already-established freedoms. Cultural and religious beliefs must not be used to deny or limit these freedoms.

Priorities in nondemocratic states: where secular values are not recognized or protected by laws, such laws should be established and applied, and address the issues that deny women full participation in society and government.

2. Separation of Religion and State

Priorities in democratic states: the Constitution should make explicit mention of the separation of religion and state. The state should not fund religions or beliefs. Also, social services, health care services or education accorded to citizens should respect the law; and all state practices should be neutral.

Priorities in nondemocratic states: certain things are fundamental in order to take first steps towards separation of religion and state. Access to education and information should be free and unrestricted. The international community should be vigilant on the application of human rights and take appropriate action where necessary.

3. Human Rights

Human rights are universal, and should be applied equally in democratic and nondemocratic states. Women’s rights are human rights, not separate rights for women.

Priorities in democratic states: women should have equal sexual, reproductive and economic rights in practice as well as in legislation.

Priorities in nondemocratic states: the right to autonomy, self-determination as an individual, and fully equal treatment at all levels of society for men and women. This takes precedence over religious or idealogical dogma.

4. Reproductive Rights

Priorities in democratic states: the state should recognize and respect the right to universal and absolute bodily ownership. Reproductive healthcare services should be free, accessible, non-judgmental and objective. Comprehensive evidence-based sex education should be universally available.

Priorities in nondemocratic states: human rights conventions should be honored in their entirety, and directives should not be vetoed on religious grounds or otherwise. International assistance should be given to grassroots campaigns involved in the provision and promotion of comprehensive reproductive health services and education.

5. Politics and Campaigning

Priorities in democratic states: it is essential to define the concept of morality as not being exclusive to religion, and to clearly promote secular feminist values as being beneficial to all citizens. These values should be communicated to citizens in a concise accessible manner using whatever means are available in order to promote the growth of a wider secular community in the future.

Priorities in nondemocratic states: we should amplify the voices of secular feminists fighting back against oppressive regimes throughout the world, and we should promote strategies and tools to overcome technological arrears in nondemocratic countries.

Priorities for Ireland

These are the priorities that the conference decided on with regard to Ireland. They should be read in conjunction with the overall declaration.

1. Secular Values in Society

The influence of religious doctrines should be removed from the Constitution.

Government should not delegate key public services to religious or cultural groups.

Services provided by the state for taxpayers must observe secular values and be for the benefit of all citizens.

2. Separation of Religion and State

Religious references should be removed from the Constitution and legislation.

The state should directly provide education, not indirectly provide for education by patron bodies.

3. Human Rights

The right to freedom from religious interference in all aspects of the lives of women.

4. Reproductive Rights

The decriminalization of abortion and related services.

The eighth amendment should be removed from the Constitution.

Protection of and access to free and legal reproductive health services, free from religious interference.

5. Politics and Campaigning

Fostering a safe environment and an inclusive community where all Irish women can identify with the secular aim of separation of religion and state.

Dublin Declaration on Secularism and Religion 2011

The above Declaration should be read alongside the Dublin Declaration on Secularism and Religion in Public Life, that was adopted at the World Atheist Convention in Dublin in June 2011.

1. Personal Freedoms

Freedom of conscience, religion and belief are private and unlimited. Freedom to practice religion should be limited only by the need to respect the rights and freedoms of others.

All people should be free to participate equally in the democratic process.

Freedom of expression should be limited only by the need to respect the rights and freedoms of others. There should be no right in law ‘to not be offended’. All blasphemy laws, whether explicit or implicit, should be repealed and should not be enacted.

2. Secular Democracy

The sovereignty of the State is derived from the people and not from any god or gods.

The only reference in the constitution to religion should be an assertion that the State is secular.

The State should be based on democracy, human rights and the rule of law. Public policy should be formed by applying reason, and not religious faith, to evidence.

Government should be secular. The state should be strictly neutral in matters of religion and its absence, favoring none and discriminating against none.

Religions should have no special financial consideration in public life, such as tax-free status for religious activities, or grants to promote religion or run faith schools.

Membership of a religion should not be a basis for appointing a person to any State position.

The law should neither grant nor refuse any right, privilege, power or immunity, on the basis of faith or religion or the absence of either.

3. Secular Education

State education should be secular. Religious education, if it happens, should be limited to education about religion and its absence.

Children should be taught about the diversity of religious and nonreligious philosophical beliefs in an objective manner, with no faith formation in school hours.

Children should be educated in critical thinking and the distinction between faith and reason as a guide to knowledge. Science should be taught free from religious interference.

4. One Law For All

There should be one secular law for all, democratically decided and evenly enforced, with no jurisdiction for religious courts to settle civil matters or family disputes.

The law should not criminalize private conduct on the grounds that the doctrine of any religion deems such conduct to be immoral, if that private conduct respects the rights and freedoms of others.

Employers or social service providers with religious beliefs should not be allowed to discriminate on any grounds not essential to the job in question.

Please promote the Dublin Declarations

Please discuss and promote the Dublin Declarations on Secularism within any atheist or secular groups that you are involved in, and in campaigning for secular change with politicians. Feel free to adapt the principles to your own situation. Please let is know if you find these declarations useful.